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RTCG also now provides four online radio channels (YUG, Millennium, Classic, Shqip) through the broadcaster's app and via the internet. Television channels. TVCG 1 – News and domestic production. TVCG 2 – Sport, entertainment. TVCG 3 – Live broadcasts from the Parliament of Montenegro and other government institutions.
Canal Tropical Télévision (Tropicana TV) CMB TV; COULEURS TELEVISION; Radio Télévision Message de Vie (RTMV) Radio-Télévision nationale congolaise (RTNC) : RTNC1, RTNC2, RTNC3, RTNC4; Raga TV, Raga+; Télévision Kin Malebo; canal le chemin la verite et la vie (CVV) Nzondo TV; Radio Télévision Catholique Elikya (RTCE) Radio Télévision ...
Jame Jam TV, Jame Jam 2, Jame Jam 3 (Targeted to European, American and Asian/Oceanian audiences) Sahar TV (Multiple languages) Al-Kawthar TV (Arabic Channel) Al-Alam News Network (Arabic Language News Channel) Press TV (English and French Language News Channel) HispanTV (Spanish Language News Channel) IranPress (Video news agency) [2]
IRIB TV5/Tehran TV (local Tehran channel) IRIB Varzesh (sports channel) IRINN (news channel) Jame Jam TV (targeted to European, American and Asian/Oceanian audiences) MIFA; Press TV (English language news channel) Saba TV Network; Sahar TV (multiple languages) Salaam TV; Shamshad TV; Tamadon TV; YourTV
Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (3 C, 37 P) Pages in category "Television stations in Iran" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
National Iranian Radio and Television (NIRT; Persian: رادیو تلویزیون ملی ایران, Râdyo Televizyon-e Melli-ye 'Irân) was the first Iranian state broadcaster, which was established on June 19, 1971, following the merger of the country's radio and television services. [1]
RTNC started television broadcasts in Kinshasa on November 24, 1966, [2] three hours a day (7pm to 10pm), on VHF channel 5. [3] By the mid-1970s, following the rename of the country to Zaire, the television station was known as Télé-Zaire, and had its broadcasting hours extended (6pm to 11pm weekdays and 10am or 1pm to 11pm weekends).
A separate network, National Iranian Television (NITV), was established in 1966. [8] This catered for a more educated public. [2] On October 26, NITV transmitted its first broadcast message, a statement by the Shah; test programs were run, and complete programming commenced in Nowruz, the Iranian New Year, in March 1967, with the first week's programs included the broadcasting of the Shah's ...